Before & After: Cosco Bar Cart

2013.01.31

There are some days when the project pieces I purchase leave others scratching their head. Enter Cosco bar cart from Salvation Army purchased for $3.99.

Seriously, why is this still here? Oh that’s right: it’s covered in rust, dust, and who knows what else.

I knew with a thorough scrubdown and a new paint job this little guy would look amazing. The black detail on the handles was what drew me in and I could immediately see it with a fresh color combination instead of faux wood grain. And even though the main tool was elbow grease, this is an extremely easy piece anyone can do.

1. I started off aggressively sanding with grade 1 wherever there was rust, then sanding with steel wool grade 00 over all the shelves. Make sure to remove ALL the rust, because even if you buy primer to cover rust, there’s still a chance the rust will continue to eat away at the metal and you will be back to step one in a few years. I don’t care if the spray paint says it will suffocate the rust until 500 years after the apocalypse.

Make sure to wear gloves or the steel wool will remove rust AND your skin.

2. Wash the entire cart with a rag and water with a few drops of dish soap. Then let it sit out in the sun and completely dry.

3. Mask off all of the handles with newspaper. Unless you want to paint them. Mine were in pretty great condition and I wanted to leave them as-is. If you can get your bar cart to come apart, by all means do so. My bolts were incredibly difficult to losen and masking it off was easier.

5. Mask off two shelves, and paint the remaining exposed shelf in light, even coats. Follow the directions on the can for recoating and drying times. I used Rust-Oleum Painter’s Touch. It gave me really even coats, better than when I have used Krylon spray paints. Don’t get me started.

6. Wait for the painted shelf to dry, then cover with newspaper. Remove the newspaper from your next shelf, paint, and so on.

The key here is to paint with light, even coats and allow plenty of drying time. Once everything has dried and you remove the newspaper, do a happy dance while drinking a Zima. It will be so rewarding after your two hours of hard work. That’s how I celebrated.

The bar cart after. About $20 in supplies and two hours work for a custom vintage feel.

It’s great for storing barware and serving platters, and handy because if there’s a large dining party it can be rolled to another room. I just love the contrasting colors with a vintage feel. So much better than rusty woodgrain. Be on the lookout for Cosco bar carts at thrift stores and don’t be intimidated by their ugliness.

Hi Angela, I’ve been looking for a bar cart and found a very cool but in really bad shape Costco mid-century in red. It’s in worst condition than the one you worded on. I have to restore the parts in chrome because they’re rusted too any advise for restoring chrome?
I’d share a pic but don’t see an option for attaching one.
Thanks an stake care.

Hi Ale,
So sorry this is a million years late. Hopefully your bar cart is either still waiting for improvement or already done! If so, please email info@snag-blog.com to share! To polish chrome, I’ve found using aluminum foil works well to clean up general wear and tear. However, yours sounds pretty rusted. You can either have it re-plated, which sometimes gets expensive, or sand it down and paint it with spray paint. Honestly, that’s what I would recommend. There are some sprays that look like metal, or you could go with a neutral color as well. Hope this helps!

I just bought the exact same cart at an estate sale this past weekend for $6. It’s in pretty good shape with a little rust on the undersides of the shelves and light scratches on the shelves. I plan on painting it when the weather warms up so I love that I found your re-do on pinterest. Great job. Love the colors you used. I’m going to keep mine in the kitchen and wasn’t sure yet how to decorate it. I don’t want it piled with stuff just because. I like how you have your cart styled. Thanks for the ideas!

I drop a leave a response when I like a post on a site or I have something to
valuable to contribute to the discussion. Usually it’s caused
by the sincerness displayed in the post I browsed. And on this post Before & After: Cosco Bar Cart.
I was moved enough to leave a leave a responsea response
😉 I actually do have a couple of questions for you if it’s okay.
Could it be just me or do a few of the comments look as if they are left
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Would you list all of your public pages like your Facebook page, twitter feed, or linkedin profile?